The problem is the evaluator's bias. It's the conflict of interest that comes about when the person valuing an item, is the one able to appraise it.
We see this problem with unemployment, where work is (de)valued by the employer. We see this problem with monopolies and corporate collusionists, where the value of the product is determined by its primary stakeholder. We see it in the finance industry, where banks sell off their own risk to eliminate liability.
The two pillars of ethical policy-making are transparency and objectivity. Simple, really. We must know all the facts, and armed with that information, must make the most objective and socially responsible decision possible. This often requires a 3rd party arbiter to avoid bias.
Money is no different. We must know where wealth is concentrated, through what means and by what purpose. We must then systematically eliminate the evaluator's bias, which will result in a more even distribution.
How do we deal with this quandary? How do we tell a 24-hr convenience store owner that a loaf of bread is only worth $2.99 after 10pm? How do we dictate value?
Things must have value only in terms of efficiency. The only good cause, the only valuable work, is in the elimination of work. Maximum efficiency is the only goal. This is why I maintain that high unemployment is not only inevitable, but positive. We need to keep driving those numbers up, as it is a direct reflection of progress.
To give an example: If I write a tutorial and publish it online, and it receives 100,000 hits, I've undoubtedly helped many people. My work has conferred benefit that has value. It may have saved dozens of people a trip to the repair shop, or saved them from purchasing a manual. In this sense, my sole value is in devaluing other, less efficient means of information sharing. This cancelling effect is the work. In this way, we are able to appraise work, not by its perceived value to others, but by this cancelling effect. Essentially, work is valued by its slowing effect on entropy and enthalpy.
Gibbs free energy:
∆G = ∆H-T∆S >> 0
We will not react spontaneously. We will conserve energy.
If we eliminate the evaluator's bias completely, we can finally evaluate that loaf of bread with efficiency, driven by transparency and objectivity.
Malthus was wrong. Moore was right! We need to function accordingly.
We see this problem with unemployment, where work is (de)valued by the employer. We see this problem with monopolies and corporate collusionists, where the value of the product is determined by its primary stakeholder. We see it in the finance industry, where banks sell off their own risk to eliminate liability.
The two pillars of ethical policy-making are transparency and objectivity. Simple, really. We must know all the facts, and armed with that information, must make the most objective and socially responsible decision possible. This often requires a 3rd party arbiter to avoid bias.
Money is no different. We must know where wealth is concentrated, through what means and by what purpose. We must then systematically eliminate the evaluator's bias, which will result in a more even distribution.
How do we deal with this quandary? How do we tell a 24-hr convenience store owner that a loaf of bread is only worth $2.99 after 10pm? How do we dictate value?
Things must have value only in terms of efficiency. The only good cause, the only valuable work, is in the elimination of work. Maximum efficiency is the only goal. This is why I maintain that high unemployment is not only inevitable, but positive. We need to keep driving those numbers up, as it is a direct reflection of progress.
To give an example: If I write a tutorial and publish it online, and it receives 100,000 hits, I've undoubtedly helped many people. My work has conferred benefit that has value. It may have saved dozens of people a trip to the repair shop, or saved them from purchasing a manual. In this sense, my sole value is in devaluing other, less efficient means of information sharing. This cancelling effect is the work. In this way, we are able to appraise work, not by its perceived value to others, but by this cancelling effect. Essentially, work is valued by its slowing effect on entropy and enthalpy.
Gibbs free energy:
∆G = ∆H-T∆S >> 0
We will not react spontaneously. We will conserve energy.
If we eliminate the evaluator's bias completely, we can finally evaluate that loaf of bread with efficiency, driven by transparency and objectivity.
Malthus was wrong. Moore was right! We need to function accordingly.